News Release

Vietnam

Shanghai to replace Hong Kong as largest office market in Greater China

2017-04-03T05:00:00Z

Chinese city will have the largest pipeline of prime office completions by 2020, shows data from real estate consulting firm JLL

Shanghai is expected to have the largest pipeline of prime office completions by 2020, overtaking Hong Kong, Sydney and Tokyo. Shanghai's central business district is set to receive approximately 1.1 million square metres of office space by 2020, with several new completions expected in 2017, following years of supply shortage.

An additional 3.3 million square metres of office development is expected in the decentralised Pudong, Hongkou and Minhang submarkets. This will bring total Grade A office space in Shanghai to 11 million square metres by 2020, surpassing Hong Kong as the largest office market in Greater China.

"Domestic firms are expected to drive demand for Grade A office space in Shanghai, while more multinationals are anticipated to vie for prime office space to capture a larger slice of the burgeoning Chinese consumer market by 2020," says Joe Zhou, Head of Research, China at JLL. "This high level of forecast demand for office space is likely to absorb the massive supply pipeline over time."

However, with rising office rents in Shanghai, an increasing number of price-sensitive tenants are shifting to emerging business areas outside the traditional CBD. Fringe districts such as Railway Station, the North Bund and Qiantan are especially attractive to tenants due to convenient access to CBD core areas. This is a trend increasingly observed across the whole Asia Pacific region, with cities such as Sydney and Mumbai seeing a boom in their Secondary Business Districts.

Tech sector impetus

JLL data indicates that in China, technology firms drove Grade A net absorption in Shanghai, Beijing, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, and Chengdu. Tech company-driven net absorption levels were higher than other sectors such as manufacturing in 2016, and tech firms are currently catching up with the absorption levels of financial services and professional services companies.

"Large volumes of capital funding are enabling more tech companies such as Didi Chuxing and Baidu to upgrade or expand to Grade A office space as they seek to make themselves more attractive to talent," says Dr Megan Walters, Head of Research, Asia Pacific at JLL. "This trend is supported on the supply side as well, with all four Tier 1 cities in China having rapidly-growing emerging CBD markets that offer large amounts of new Grade A space, usually at rents that larger tech companies can afford."

A growing number of tech companies are likely to make co-working spaces, serviced offices, and public spaces an integral part of their real estate portfolio. Companies are increasingly consolidating in fewer core locations; complemented by a network of flexible space. These liquid spaces – such as co-working spaces and serviced offices – promote collaboration, offer employees greater autonomy, as well as provide an agile and scalable real estate portfolio.